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Cold Weather Response of Steel (TRANSACTIONS -- VOL. 254)By George J. Thompson
The need for studying brittle fracture is defined; the main elements of this type of failure are explained; and the mechanism at crack initiation is outlined. Various design and maintenance practices
Jan 1, 1974
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Papers - Low-carbon Steel (With Discussion)By H. B. Pulsifer
One of the most common basic open-hearth furnace products is a simple carbon steel with a carbon range from 0.05 to 0.15 per cent. The material is widely used for sheets, tubes, bars, wire and the inn
Jan 1, 1931
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Production And Properties Of The Commercial MagnesiasBy Max Y. Seaton
THE scope of this paper will be limited to finished materials that contain a large preponderance (around 80 per cent or more) of magnesium oxide. The large and commercially important production of ref
Jan 1, 1942
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New York Precious Metals - The Platinum Metals and Their Alloys (with Discussion)By Frederic E. Carter
There have been many attempts to prove that platinum was known to the ancients, but since no traces of the metal have been found in the relics of early times, it must be concluded that it was not know
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Transformation of Austenite - Time-temperature Relations in Tempering Steel (Metals Technology, September 1945) (With discussion)By L. D. Jaffe, J. H. Hollomon
The effect of tempering temperature and time upon the properties of quenched steel is clearly a subject of great practical importance, as well as of considerable theoretical interest. It would be very
Jan 1, 1945
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Time-Temperature Relations In Tempering SteelBy L. D. Jaffe, J. H. Hollomon
THE effect of tempering temperature and time upon the properties of quenched steel is clearly a subject of great practical importance, as well as of considerable theoretical interest. It would be very
Jan 1, 1945
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Production And Properties Of The Commercial Magnesias (22b58c8f-d321-4624-bdd4-0eadf6ae4c84)By Max Y. Seaton
THE scope of this paper will be limited to finished materials that contain a large preponderance (around 80 per cent or more) of magnesium oxide. The large and commercially important production of ref
Jan 1, 1942
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Production Engineering and Research - Selective Adsorption of Hydrocarbon and Water Vapor on Alumina at Atmospheric Pressure (T.P. 1628, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1943)By L. S. Reid, R. L. Huntington, Chen Chun Ku
The simultaneous adsorption of water and hydrocarbon vapor from natural gas by three grades of alumina has been studied at atmospheric pressure and temperature. Results of this investigation reveal th
Jan 1, 1944
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Production Engineering and Research - Selective Adsorption of Hydrocarbon and Water Vapor on Alumina at Atmospheric Pressure (T.P. 1628, Petr. Tech., Nov. 1943)By R. L. Huntington, L. S. Reid, Chen Chun Ku
The simultaneous adsorption of water and hydrocarbon vapor from natural gas by three grades of alumina has been studied at atmospheric pressure and temperature. Results of this investigation reveal th
Jan 1, 1944
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Over-Oxidation Of Steel. (e1a2e7ca-e515-4962-ad80-bb203cdfa557)Discussion of the paper of W. R. Shimer and F. O. Kichline, presented at the New York Meeting, October, 1913, and printed in Bulletin No. 81, September, 1913, pp. 2361 to 2377. ALLERTON S. CUSHMAN,*
Jan 12, 1913
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Technical Notes Iron and Steel Division - An Efficient Method of Desulfurizing Liquid Pig IronBy L. Wahl, M. Allard, B. Trentini
REMOVAL of sulfur in steelmaking is presently a problem of utmost importance as requirements on final sulfur contents in finished steels become increasingly strict. This is in spite of often increased
Jan 1, 1958
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Maintaining Interest In SafetyBy C. B. Auel
THE subject of this paper involves the crux of the industrial safety problem. It is not overstating the fact to say that "a plant can be made as safe as the management and the workers want it to be;"
Jan 6, 1925
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Atlanta, Ga Paper - Discussion of Mr. Ormsbee's paper on A Southern Coal-Washing Plant (see p. 113)William B. Phillips, Birmingham, Ala.: The analysis of Pratt coal made by myself, and given by Mr. Ormsbee in his paper (p. 113), is likely to mislead the reader as to the real nature of this coal. It
Jan 1, 1896
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Mining Possibilities of the ArgentineBy Chester B. White
ARGENTINA is a country that has never been properly prospected. This is my settled conclusion after reporting on mines in this country ever since 1914, crossing all the mining provinces from Chubut, i
Jan 1, 1937
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A Thermodynamic Theory Of The Fracture Of MetalsBy Edward Saibel
THE various theories that have been advanced to explain or predict the conditions under which a metal fractures may be divided into two categories: First, there are the macroscopic theories generall
Jan 1, 1947
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Recording Pyrometry - DiscussionR. W. NEWCOMB,* New York, N. Y. (written discussiont).-On page 1638 mention is made of a new -instrument with an exceptionally high resistance that has been developed by Charles Engelhard. All frictio
Jan 12, 1919
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Discussion - Using Geostatistics To Predict The Characteristics Of Washed Coal - Technical Papers, Mining Engineering, Vol. 36, No. 4 April, 1984, pp. 369-373 – Armstrong, M.By Y. C. Kim, S. L. Barua
M. Armstrong's paper is very interesting and can be regarded as a pioneering work of applying geostatistics on washed coal. The density levels used in her study are uniformly spaced, which facili
Jan 1, 1986
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Deflection of GirdersBy W. S. Ayres
I AM well aware that this subject is not strictly in the line of mining engineering, yet as it is a subject with which mining engineers at times have something to do, I have thought, perhaps, it might
Jan 1, 1877
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Housing Of Labor And Sanitation At -Mines In IndiaThe housing of labor and sanitation at mines in India are difficult problems to solve because-no more than two or three castes will accept the same conditions, and conditions suitable to one coal-fiel
Jan 12, 1918
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Welcoming AddressBy Charles L. Hosler
My function here today is not to illuminate any particular subject but simply to welcome you to Penn State and to the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences. Our college is, of course, dedicated to the
Jan 1, 1977